My brother and I are looking at getting into Scuba diving....... What is the best way to go about this? Do it Privately? Buy your own gear... Buy some gear but not all?Take lessons from someone, or take the PE classes on campus?What certifications are required, how long do they last?Thanks for your input.
6/28/2006 11:44:28 AM
6/28/2006 12:21:48 PM
thanks
6/28/2006 12:31:14 PM
I was certified through State and from what I understand, it's much cheaper.Also, b/c the instruction is spread out over the course of the semester... you learn more and imo, can become a better diver b/c of it.
6/28/2006 1:04:05 PM
cost at dive shop: 325 everything you need but mask fins and snorkelcost at State: (in-State) around $500 (incl. fees) to add the extra credits. (out-of-state) Ridiculous Plus any fees the class itself chargeshttp://www.fis.ncsu.edu/cashier/tuition/ugtuition.aspDive shop: classes start weekly and you'll be done and in the water soon.don't worry about "learning more". You'll learn EVERYTHING you need in a dive shop-- PADI sets the standard. Even the Dive Masters learned at a dive shop. Don't worry about that. The best way to learn is get the basic safety procedures, get out there and dive.Unless the class at NC State offers "open water", and "advanced", and maybe "nitrox" all in one semester it's probably not worth it.
6/28/2006 1:32:39 PM
6/28/2006 1:46:42 PM
yea, when i took the class in school, i got "open water" and "nitrox" certified.you can't discredit the amount of time you get to spend in the water and in the classroom when you take it through the school vs. local dive shop/quarryalso, i didn't pay anywhere close to $500.... i was registered as a full-time student and i just covered book cost and minor fees for tanks, etc.i only shelled out other money for mask, fins, and snorkel but you have to buy those either way
6/28/2006 2:17:33 PM
anyone know anybody looking for a drysuit with brand new seals and boots?pm for more info thx
6/28/2006 2:20:18 PM
^^,^^^yeah, I messed up the tuition pricing. Anything over 12hrs is the same price right? I've been in grad school awhile so I forgot about that.
6/28/2006 4:01:30 PM
Ok, first you don't want to get certified at a shop at all costs if you can avoid it. The BEST diver from a dive shop will be worse than the worst diver from NCSU I can just about guarantee it. We have people who come into our program all the time who are already certified and I guess they're taking it to either dive more or because they think it'll be easy credit. By the end of the course most of them say that they pretty much learned how to actually (horizontal in the water, good buoyancy and trim, etc). You'll most likely never get that from a local dive shop. One of my pet peeves is people in the water who can't control what they're doing and they're flutter/scissor kicking all around kicking up sand to destroy the visibility or touch the coral or stand on the wreck...If you have a the slightest idea that you ever might want to dive, take it at NCSU. We have one of the best diving curriculums out there, bar none. We use high quality equipment (backplate/wing setup instead of a jacket-style BC) and we have a 13ft deep diving well with mirrors on the sides to help you show you how bad (or good, perhaps) you look with your trim and technique.At a dive shop you'll get certified with a few hours in the classroom and perhaps 5-10 hours max in the pool.At NCSU you're in class 2 hours/day, 2 days/week for the entire semester. Probably 60-70% of that is in the pool with the rest doing classroom work.This is a post I recently made on ScubaBoard.com and I'll just copy/paste it here--it should be quite informative. If you have any questions feel free to PM me; I TA (technically we're volunteers since we're not paid) for the course and might volunteer for the rescue course next semester as well, depending on my schedule.In this post I said there are 4 classes; technically there are 5. PE226 is the OW/Nitrox class and is worth 2 hours. If you wish to get certified you are required to sign up for PE229 (this is the one I left out)--which is a 1-hour credit only deal. That's the quarry/coast/keys stuff. Those classes meet on occasion (depending on which section you're in it could be once or twice a semester for the keys or every week for the quarry) to assess your skills with the instructor you will be making the trips with.As a final note--the classes are demanding but quite rewarding. If you catch the diving bug, your bank account might start to suffer, though... Like I said, if you have any questions feel free to PM me.
7/1/2006 10:36:47 PM
7/1/2006 10:55:33 PM
dude, you're a fucking idiot. I am positive I have logged more hours diving than you. I was certified in 96 and grew up in Wrightsville beach where I dived every other fucking weekend.
7/2/2006 12:41:46 AM
If it's someone I know or I'm diving with, then it affects me. More importantly it affects the sport itself.Personally I don't care how many hours you have underwater--I've seen people with 1500 dives+ who suck ass. With your attitude that you're the all-knowing super-diver I seriously doubt you're as experienced as you say you are. Everyone I've ever seen who has an attitude like that is the buy who puts his tank on backwards.Yeah you don't have to be a SEAL to enjoy diving, but it's much more enjoyable when you know what's going on and you know how to deal with problems that can go wrong.As to PADI setting the standard--yes you're right; they set the standard--the lowest standard you can possibly have to dive. GUE sets the bar.
7/2/2006 2:44:31 AM
7/2/2006 12:21:03 PM
Go take PE227 if you get a chance; it's the rescue class. You'll probably enjoy it. That "tow them across the quarry and back" tow is a bitch, though.
7/2/2006 2:53:48 PM
I love diving.
7/2/2006 11:09:39 PM